Secularism is becoming a State-enforced religion says Archbishop of Chicago

The United States is increasingly enforcing a “state religion” based on socially liberal values, the Catholic Archbishop of Chicago, Cardinal Francis George, said this week. He added that Catholics would end up “limiting (their) access to positions of prestige and power in society” if they held to their values.

Writing in his regular column, Cardinal George wrote that American Catholics now faced a “crisis of belief” between loyalty to their country on the one hand and their faith on the other.

“In recent years, society has brought social and legislative approval to all types of sexual relationships that used to be considered ‘sinful.’” he wrote. “Since the biblical vision of what it means to be human tells us that not every friendship or love can be expressed in sexual relations, the church’s teaching on these issues is now evidence of intolerance for what the civil law upholds and even imposes. What was once a request to live and let live has now become a demand for approval. The ‘ruling class,’ those who shape public opinion in politics, in education, in communications, in entertainment, is using the civil law to impose its own form of morality on everyone. We are told that, even in marriage itself, there is no difference between men and women, although nature and our very bodies clearly evidence that men and women are not interchangeable at will in forming a family. Nevertheless, those who do not conform to the official religion, we are warned, place their citizenship in danger.”

The Cardinal referenced the recent controversy over the US Supreme Court’s decision in the Hobby Lobby case, allowing a business run by an evangelical family to refuse to pay for health insurance that covered abortifacients for its employees. Some media commentary at the time suggested that some of the Supreme Court judges had allowed their Catholicism to influence their decision.

When the recent case about religious objection to one provision of the Health Care Act was decided against the State religion, the Huffington Post (June 30, 2014) raised “concerns about the compatibility between being a Catholic and being a good citizen.” This is not the voice of the nativists who first fought against Catholic immigration in the 1830s. Nor is it the voice of those who burned convents and churches in Boston and Philadelphia a decade later. Neither is it the voice of the Know-Nothing Party of the 1840s and 1850s, nor of the Ku Klux Klan, which burned crosses before Catholic churches in the Midwest after the civil war. It is a voice more sophisticated than that of the American Protective Association, whose members promised never to vote for a Catholic for public office. This is, rather, the self-righteous voice of some members of the American establishment today who regard themselves as ‘progressive’ and ‘enlightened.’”

Cardinal George went on:

“Swimming against the tide means limiting one’s access to positions of prestige and power in society. It means that those who choose to live by the Catholic faith will not be welcomed as political candidates to national office, will not sit on editorial boards of major newspapers, will not be at home on most university faculties, will not have successful careers as actors and entertainers. Nor will their children, who will also be suspect. Since all public institutions, no matter who owns or operates them, will be agents of the government and conform their activities to the demands of the official religion, the practice of medicine and law will become more difficult for faithful Catholics. It already means in some States that those who run businesses must conform their activities to the official religion or be fined, as Christians and Jews are fined for their religion in countries governed by Sharia law.

Cardinal George also spoke of the “state religion’s” indifference to family life and the poor:

“A reader of the tale of two churches, an outside observer, might note that American civil law has done much to weaken and destroy what is the basic unit of every human society, the family. With the weakening of the internal restraints that healthy family life teaches, the State will need to impose more and more external restraints on everyone’s activities. An outside observer might also note that the official religion’s imposing whatever its proponents currently desire on all citizens and even on the world at large inevitably generates resentment. An outside observer might point out that class plays a large role in determining the tenets of the official State religion. ‘Same-sex marriage,’ as a case in point, is not an issue for the poor or those on the margins of society.”

The Iona Institute
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